Boonton Twp, NJ

Originally
named Boonetown honoring Thomas Boone, Governor of New Jersey in 1760, Boonton has been made world famous by the manufacture of Boontonware plastic tableware. It is also known for its many antique shops.

Boonton TownshipBoonton Township, comprised of approximately eight
square miles in north central Morris County, has retained
much of its natural character and rural charm.
Incorporated in 1868, the township had the earliest known
roads. McCaffrey Lane, the oldest recorded thoroughfare in
the area, was built in 1767, and in 1822 North Main Street
was "cut" along the proposed Morris Canal route. In 1824
the Morris Canal and Banking Company was chartered and the
Powerville Hotel, still standing, was built near Lock No.
11 to accommodate both canal and transient trade. It later
gained fame as a pre-Civil War Underground Railroad
station. In the late 1920's, the township became home to
the Aircraft Radio Corporation, which pioneered electronic
instrumentation for use in planes.

Mountain Lakes High School (9-12)96 Powerville Road
Mountain Lakes, NJ 07046
(973) 334-8400
www.mtlakes.org/hs/
There is a sending/receiving agreement in place between
the Boonton Township Board of Education and Mountain Lakes
Board of Education for High School. Please contact the
Boonton Township Board of Education for more information.

Boonton TownLocated about seven miles north of Morristown, Boonton
was settled on the hills along the Rockaway River as early
as 1747, however, the original village of Boonton was
inundated by the Jersey City Reservoir in 1903.

Contemporary Boonton developed around 1829 as a result of
the construction of the Morris Canal and the establishment
of the New Jersey Iron Company. Access to Boonton is
provided via Myrtle Avenue (US 202), and I-287, as well as
NJ Transit's Boonton Line. The town contains a traditional
Main Street business district with its notable antique
shops. The town is also noted for its one- and two-family
homes, townhouses, and restored homes representing the
Colonial, Victorian and Contemporary eras.

Boonton is bisected by I-287, a major north-south freeway,
and Route 202. The two-and –a-half square mile community
is almost fully developed and is the shopping center for
adjacent communities. The diversified business district
includes five banks, food, clothing and variety stores. The
town's economic center, Main Street, is lined with a
mixture of mom-and-pop boutiques and antique stores, and
computer and small Internet companies housed behind
turn-of-the-century brick building facades.

Victorian houses are predominant in some parts of town. Elsewhere, historic dwellings, built between 1850 and 1855, intermix with ranch and split-level dwellings, condominiums and townhouses.

The rise from the Rockaway River, the New York skyline and surrounding plains are visible from the town’s higher elevations. Rich in colonial heritage, the town stretches north and east to Boonton Township and Montville and to Mountain Lakes and Parsippany in the South.

Since 1903, much of the early history of the original
community is buried beneath the waters of the Jersey City
Reservoir. Once the site of forges, rolling mills, a
sawmill, a nail factory, gristmill and early homes of Dutch
and English settlers, the town now dominates the hills that
surround the reservoir. Stretches of the Morris Canal are
still visible as is the remarkable 80-foot plane which
allowed canal travelers to bypass the falls of the Rockaway
River.

Public Schools:School Street School K-4; John Hill School 5-8; Boonton High Schoo1 9-l2

Website:
Boonton Town Website
TransportationNearby Routes 10, 23, 46, 202, I-80, 280 and 287 offer Boonton Residents quick access to points in the metropolitan area. Bus service to New York City is available in town on Route 46. Conrail provides train service to Hoboken. A taxi service and several limousine services are available in town. New Jersey Transport provides bus service from Morristown through Boonton and to Willowbrook Mall.

Recreation FacilitiesCounty, state and federal
parks, are within a few minutes drive where you can try your
hand at everything from bocce to baseball. The Morris County
Park Commission operates 24 sites, including three golf
courses, two aboreta and the Mennen Sports Arena and offers
a year-round program of activities throughout the county
like adult education courses, programs for school children,
planned trail walks, golf tournaments and outdoor concerts.

PLEASE NOTE: This is not an official website of DeHart Place and is not affiliated with the DeHart Place Homeowners Community Association.
Please contact the Management Company at at 973-785-0441
This website was designed to promote the DeHart Place Community, it's Homes and Lifestyle to Home Buyers looking in the area.